On Mon, Oct 3, 2016 at 1:54 PM, TE Dukes tdukes@palmettoshopper.com wrote:
-----Original Message----- From: centos-bounces@centos.org [mailto:centos-bounces@centos.org] On Behalf Of Michael Cole Sent: Friday, September 30, 2016 9:41 PM To: centos@centos.org Subject: Re: [CentOS] Virtualization Networking
Deletion does not remove all, Try a erase if that did not work.
Configuration files are not always where you expect then to be.
Regards Michael Cole
On Friday, September 30, 2016 9:16:44 PM TE Dukes wrote:
I deleted all virtualization packages and re-installed.
Something must have been hosed up.
Installing a VM and it didn't even ask to setup the network. Hopefully that's a good sign.
Will know shortly....................
TIA
OK, I'm about done trying to get this to work. I have spent HOURS reading, installing, re-installing, etc.
I can get the guest to access the internet but have tried every was possible to be able to access the guest from the LAN or even the host. Nothing I have tried works.
The only thing all documentation leaves out is how to set up the guest networking during the install. Seems if I don't set anything up or just set it to DHCP it has internet connectivity, but that is all.
I have gone back in after the guest has been installed and changed the networking configuration to match my LAN, that doesn't work either. I lose internet accessibility when I do that.
I have tried to install CentOS 7 and Debian 8, the same problems with each. I have tried CentOS the built in Virt-Manager and VirtualBox. with same results. Can't seem to find the free version of VMware but I suspect I would have the same results as well.
Again, any help would be greatly appreciated.
TI!
If you still have in place environment with virt-manager, can you send the output of
virsh net-list
Then for every network-name you get into the output of the command above in column "Name"
virsh net-dumpxml network-name
Then brctl show
Feel free to transform any ip you think could be sensible.
Gianluca